ZB ZB
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

Kate Hawkesby: Latest idea for schools may well be a winner

Author
Kate Hawkesby,
Publish Date
Mon, 23 Jul 2018, 7:13AM
Kids learn better if they are enjoying it. (Photo: Getty Images)

Kate Hawkesby: Latest idea for schools may well be a winner

Author
Kate Hawkesby,
Publish Date
Mon, 23 Jul 2018, 7:13AM

School goes back today and returning with the students will be the traffic from which you’ll probably hear an audible sigh of exhausted relief from every parent. That’ is if they are not busy getting involved in school gate rage at drop off. 

The only parents not sighing with relief might be those with littlies starting school today, in their too big uniforms, with their nervous and brave grins as they navigate the school gate for the very first time.

But should we as parents be nervous about what sort of education our kids are getting?

It’s a topsy turvy time that’s for sure. The axing of National Standards, the review of NCEA, open plan classrooms vs closed ones, an ongoing teacher shortage, strikes looming. 

But now, there are also calls for more ‘play-based’ learning.

Learning through play isn't new of course it's just that more schools are now looking at integrating it. Kids climbing trees, clambering through mud, playing with sticks teachers out of the classroom and into their gumboots.

The play-based approach doesn’t suit all schools, the more traditional ones won’t want a bar of this kind of carry-on, they world view it as nothing more than an OSH hazard and an ACC claim waiting to happen. 

But surprisingly more and more schools are embracing the concept. Learning through play is based on evidence that people learn best when they’re engaged, emotionally as well as intellectually. 

Someone I admire who speaks a lot of sense is neuroscience educator Nathan Wallis. He says kids need to ‘develop an emotional disposition towards learning, finding that something is fun before learning repetitive patterns like words and numbers.’

I know from my own experience that a couple of our kids have learned more through working in part time jobs than they have at school in terms of what they’ve soaked up and retained.

I imagine it’s similar with the play based environment, attitude and problem solving ability comes before rote learning. Having kids talk, engage, create and work it out for themselves because they want to, can only enhance the education experience.

And although I sometimes wish we could throw out our entire current school system, and start again by catering to a wider variety of learning and behaviours and being more inclusive to all types of learning styles and abilities, I guess we just have to try to stay open minded and hope the school system might evolve a bit quicker for the littlies starting today, than it has done over the past 20 years.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you